Archive for the ‘Firefox’ Category

Address bar search: Firefox 4 vs. Chrome 9

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

I’ve been a long time Fire­fox user. Recently though (over last cou­ple of months) I’ve been using Chrome more and more until it became my default browser. Both are great browsers and both have strengths and weak­nesses that the other one doesn’t have. One such thing I noticed today is how eas­ily I can find a web­site I have vis­ited pre­vi­ously by typ­ing in some key­word (or part of it) to my address bar.

 

firefox_search

search_chrome

I have actu­ally vis­ited much more NHiber­nate related sites on Chrome recently, yet it failed to pro­vide pretty much any rel­e­vant results. Fire­fox on the other hand just sim­ply rocks by sug­gest­ing based on not just address but also title of the site, and some other metrics.

 

That’s a killer fea­ture, right there.

Disable Firefox download window flashing

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

If you (like me) are annoyed by the Fire­fox down­load win­dow com­ing up and flash­ing on your taskbar each time you down­load a file here’s quick way to dis­able it:

  • Go to about:config (like I shown here)
  • find browser.download.manager.flashCount
  • change it’s value to 0

done.

 

You may also want to make sure that browser.download.manager.focusWhenStarting is false.

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Resize any Firefox Window

Friday, December 28th, 2007

I some­times come across a web­site that pops up a win­dow with some video, chat or some­thing, but its size is fixed, and it doesn't fit in it, when opened in Fire­fox. I used to move that tab to the main win­dow, where I'm able to resize it, but I don't like doing that. I want to be able to resize that stub­born win­dow in the first place, so I found a way to do just that.

It only requires three sim­ple steps:

  • write about:config in your address bar, and hit enter
  • find dom.disable_window_open_feature.resizable
  • double-click it in order to change its value.

Change its value to true

Changes take effect imme­di­ately, so you don't have to restart your browser or any­thing. Now, you can resize any window.

You can now resize any window

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About web browsers and Apple Safari for windows in particular

Saturday, June 16th, 2007

Are you, dear reader one of those peo­ple who down­loaded Apple Safari 3 beta for win­dows? I am, and for sure I will not switch to Safari. I am pretty happy with my cur­rent con­fig­u­ra­tion. Pri­mar­ily I use Fire­fox with lots of exten­sions, and I can't imag­ine not hav­ing it. It's basi­cally first appli­ca­tion I install on clear sys­tem. It may not be the fastest (actu­ally for most sites it's the slow­est of all browsers I use), it may eat up lots of RAM and proces­sor cycles, but user expe­ri­ence blows all other browsers away. To make things clear. Bare Fire­fox, with no exten­sions at all, is nice, but if I for some rea­son could not install exten­sions to it, I would use Opera, that is great prod­uct, but basi­cally lacks one thing, that makes me use it only occa­sion­ally, for things like bank­ing: no adblock plus. Adbock plus is THE ulti­mate Fire­fox exten­sion. The first one I install, right after I install Fire­fox. To para­phrase Scott Hansel­man: "Wladimir Palant should have a licence to print money".

I have IE, like every­one using win­dows, but I actu­ally almost don't use it at all. I used it for sites that had WMV video embed­ded, before MS released Fire­fox exten­sion to sup­port that, and now I only use it to visit sites that were designed by troglodytes unaware of the fact, that there is word beside IE.

My friend at work has Apple Mac­Book pro, and he had showed me once the great RSS reader built into it, and it was basi­cally the only rea­son why I down­loaded the browser — to see if the win­dows ver­sion has this reader as well. Safari as a tool to browse web sites sim­ply is the worst of all browsers I have. Let images speak for thou­sand words: below are screen­shots of my blog, in all 4 browsers, in 800x600.

firefox

ie

opera

safari

On all 3 first browsers (Fire­fox, Inter­net Explorer and Opera) site looks basi­cally the same. IE folds blog sub­ti­tle few lines ear­lier than Fire­fox and Opera, but user expe­ri­ence stays the same. Now let's take a look at our new born 'hero'. Blog title: gone, blog sub­ti­tle: gone as well, post titles: same as before. What else — look at the tag cloud: some tags were changed to under­line. Steve Jobs said that it is wicked fast — well I didn't see this speed. I didn't mea­sure the time of load, but it feels that even Fire­fox is faster (on those sev­eral sites I visited).

I will give a try to the built in RSS reader, that looks very promis­ing, but except for this: Safari is one big dis­ap­point­ment and mis­un­der­stand­ing. It's like a step back, even com­par­ing to IE7. Not recommended.

Firefox Extensions I can't live without #2

Monday, May 28th, 2007

Well, maybe it's not the best title since I'm going to write not only about exten­sions I've been using for long long time, but new (for me) as well.

Grab and Drag is one of the lat­ter, I've been using it for only sev­eral hours and I sim­ply loved it. It does basi­cally what it's name says — enables you to scroll web pages how you would scroll PDF doc­u­ments in Acro­bat Reader. It doesn't block links, you can set hot key for tem­po­rary dis­abling this fea­ture, you can make it switch between 'hand drag' and 'nor­mal' mode after dou­ble click and sev­eral more things. Actu­ally it does all I would expect it to do, and more.

 

One of exten­sions I TRULY can't imag­ine surf­ing with­out is Tab Mix Plus. It's one of most pow­er­ful cus­tomiz­able exten­sions, and one of the most use­ful. Let me say that it's option win­dow alone, has 6 tabs (many of which have sub­tabs). It fixes many of short­com­ings of stan­dard Fire­fox. For exam­ple? dbclick open tab to clone it (with it's his­tory), cen­ter clink empty space on tab bar, to bring back last closed tab, see load­ing progress on every tab, bet­ter ses­sion man­age­ment, and many many more. You can have in ff2 'close active tab' but­ton on the left side of tab bar (like in ff1.5).

Firefox extensions I can't live without (part 1)

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

One thing I LOVE about Fire­fox the most is tons of great exten­sions. I try to stay on top of things and once a while I dive into Mozilla's exten­sions repos­i­tory to see if there have been some good addi­tions. I test those that look promis­ing, and dur­ing those few years since I started using Fire­fox I col­lected some that I can not imag­ine surf­ing with­out (alpha­betic order).

Adblock Plus — a must-have for every­one. With addi­tion of Fil­ters it's my first line of defense against ads. It enables you to fil­ter links, adds, flash and ActiveX from web­sites using black­lists and whitelists (you can use wild­cards, for exam­ple *ban­ner* will block every­thing with ban­ner in name). I absolutely couldn't live with­out it.

Aging Tabs — very nice lit­tle exten­sion that you won't appre­ci­ate until you use it for some time. Basi­cally if you have open sev­eral tabs it will change color of every tab with time, or every time you switch active tab (that's the mode I use). You can set start color to white and end color to dark gray and you will be able to at one glimpse to see that you opened a tab and didn't look into it for long time. (Which may mean that you didn't look into it at all, or just sim­ply for­got to close it).

Cute­Menu — adds icons to menus, witch greatly improves readability.

Down them all — down­load man­ager with abil­ity to pause, resume, down­load file faster in sev­eral parts. It has this nice option down them all, that opens a win­dow with all links in active site, you can then set a mask, and get many files in one go.

Link Alert — when you mouse over a link it adds lit­tle icon next to the arrow, indi­cat­ing, type of link tar­get (is it a site that will open in other window/tab, is it secured/unsecured site, image, video, tor­rent, and many more). Very nice.